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Fa
4 " a*> S t . ***** Lih^
Fh * y SOUTH FARMINGD ' WJI
FARiVflNGDALE PUBLIC UBftAItff
J^ MlTiGDAU* i* lx ft. Xi
10* POWELL HOUSE — 17QO
SERVING GREATER FARMINGDALE, BETHPAGE & MELVILLE
Vpl. 2 No. 41 • cond Class Postage has been paid at Farmingdale, N. Y. 11735 Thursday, August 26, 1965
13,243 STUDENTS TO
ANSWER SCHOOL BELL
GOP To Raise $ 5,000
A farmingdale Republican
election campaign fund of $ 5,000
was the goal presented to the 34
committeemen by President Ray
Radigan of the Farmingdale GOP
at their meeting last Friday even­ing
at the Lobsterman on Fulton
Street.
This marked the beginning in
earnest of the campaign waged by
Frank J. Hynes, Town of Oyster
Bay tax receiver for a seat on the
Oyster Bay Town council. Im­mediately
after Labor Day he'll
begin crisscrossing the town
from the North Shore to Great
South Bay to bring his message
and his program to the local
electorate.
Seeing to it that his campaign
will not run out of steam through
lack of the wherewhital will be
Willis B. Carman, Jr., of 70
Bethpage Rd. and Charles Cronin
of 150 Bethpage Rd. who are in
charge of the two major fund
raising efforts. One is the pub­lication
of a GOP Victory Journal
and the other a cocktail party in
honor of Frank Hynes to be held
on Sunday, October 17th between
4- 7 p. m. at the Sons of Italy Hall
on Boundary Ave. Ultimately
responsible for the success of
the two fund raising venture will
be the committeemen who were
given instructions as to how to go
about providing the financial
foundation. They will now start to
solicit advertising for the journal
and sell the cocktail party tickets
which are priced at $ 5.00 each.
The tickets will also be available
through all members and officers
of the Farmingdale Republican
Club.
Fehrenbach Urges
' Geriatric Clinics'
Assemblyman Edwin J. Feh­renbach,
GOP candidate for Town
Supervisor of Oyster Bay, urged
the county to develop extensive
" geriatric clinics", specializing
in health care for the aged.
With the advent of medicare,
Fehrenbach stated, far greater
demands will be placed upon our
health and medical facilities by
our county's aged population.
" We should be in the forefront
of this vital development by pro­viding
specialized clinics for the
aged. Here, specialists in arthri­tis
and rheumatism, the degen­erative
diseases, heart and lung
and speech and hearing ailments
could focus concentrated atten­tion
on the health problems of
the elderly.
Undoubtedly, medicare will
help ease the financial plight of
many of our senior citizens in
their quest for proper treatment.
13,243 students will be going to class in the
Farmingdale Public Schools on Wednesday, Septem­ber
8.
11,400 students will be transported by the Farm­ingdale
Public Schools to class by the Long Island
Bus Company with 9,600 going to the six elementary
school buildings, two junior high school buildings
and the Farmingdale Senior High School building;
a total 1,800 will be transported to parochial and
private schools within the ten mile limit.
The total public school enrollment will be 13,243;
1,400 will be attending St. Killian's; 140 at St. James;
120 at Maria Reginia; and 200 at Our Lady of
Lourdes.
School age children total 15,400 so that 260 are
going to other private or parochial schools. Three
will be attending Friends Academy; one will be at­tending
Westbury Friends; seven to Eastern Military
Academy; 32 are going to Chaminade; nine will
attend Archbishop Molloy; 13 will attend Long
Island Lutheran High School; and a small number
will attend Trinity Lutheran, Our Redeemer Luth­eran,
Grace Church School; and a number will be
transported to Special Service schools such as Mill
Neck Manor School for the Deaf; AHRC in Westbury;
The Cerebral Palsy school in Roosevelt; and the
Catholic Charities school for the Deaf and Blind at
St. James R. C. school for the retarded children,
emotionally disturbed and brain injured at Duffy
Avenue, Hicksville.
Where the front license plate used to oo is a new replacement, Fehrenbach
GOP gimmick to be appearing Boon all over Oyster Bay urging the election
of Assemblyman Edwin J- Fehrenbach as Town Supervisor. Fehrenbach
served in the Assembly for eight years.
One of four language laboratories which will assist
in the teaching of French, Spanish, German and
Russian in School District 22. Students listen to
recorded conversations in the language that they
are studying and then record their own conversation
for comparison purposes. The school district has
had language labs for eight years in one school and
for five years in two others.

Fa
4 " a*> S t . ***** Lih^
Fh * y SOUTH FARMINGD ' WJI
FARiVflNGDALE PUBLIC UBftAItff
J^ MlTiGDAU* i* lx ft. Xi
10* POWELL HOUSE — 17QO
SERVING GREATER FARMINGDALE, BETHPAGE & MELVILLE
Vpl. 2 No. 41 • cond Class Postage has been paid at Farmingdale, N. Y. 11735 Thursday, August 26, 1965
13,243 STUDENTS TO
ANSWER SCHOOL BELL
GOP To Raise $ 5,000
A farmingdale Republican
election campaign fund of $ 5,000
was the goal presented to the 34
committeemen by President Ray
Radigan of the Farmingdale GOP
at their meeting last Friday even­ing
at the Lobsterman on Fulton
Street.
This marked the beginning in
earnest of the campaign waged by
Frank J. Hynes, Town of Oyster
Bay tax receiver for a seat on the
Oyster Bay Town council. Im­mediately
after Labor Day he'll
begin crisscrossing the town
from the North Shore to Great
South Bay to bring his message
and his program to the local
electorate.
Seeing to it that his campaign
will not run out of steam through
lack of the wherewhital will be
Willis B. Carman, Jr., of 70
Bethpage Rd. and Charles Cronin
of 150 Bethpage Rd. who are in
charge of the two major fund
raising efforts. One is the pub­lication
of a GOP Victory Journal
and the other a cocktail party in
honor of Frank Hynes to be held
on Sunday, October 17th between
4- 7 p. m. at the Sons of Italy Hall
on Boundary Ave. Ultimately
responsible for the success of
the two fund raising venture will
be the committeemen who were
given instructions as to how to go
about providing the financial
foundation. They will now start to
solicit advertising for the journal
and sell the cocktail party tickets
which are priced at $ 5.00 each.
The tickets will also be available
through all members and officers
of the Farmingdale Republican
Club.
Fehrenbach Urges
' Geriatric Clinics'
Assemblyman Edwin J. Feh­renbach,
GOP candidate for Town
Supervisor of Oyster Bay, urged
the county to develop extensive
" geriatric clinics", specializing
in health care for the aged.
With the advent of medicare,
Fehrenbach stated, far greater
demands will be placed upon our
health and medical facilities by
our county's aged population.
" We should be in the forefront
of this vital development by pro­viding
specialized clinics for the
aged. Here, specialists in arthri­tis
and rheumatism, the degen­erative
diseases, heart and lung
and speech and hearing ailments
could focus concentrated atten­tion
on the health problems of
the elderly.
Undoubtedly, medicare will
help ease the financial plight of
many of our senior citizens in
their quest for proper treatment.
13,243 students will be going to class in the
Farmingdale Public Schools on Wednesday, Septem­ber
8.
11,400 students will be transported by the Farm­ingdale
Public Schools to class by the Long Island
Bus Company with 9,600 going to the six elementary
school buildings, two junior high school buildings
and the Farmingdale Senior High School building;
a total 1,800 will be transported to parochial and
private schools within the ten mile limit.
The total public school enrollment will be 13,243;
1,400 will be attending St. Killian's; 140 at St. James;
120 at Maria Reginia; and 200 at Our Lady of
Lourdes.
School age children total 15,400 so that 260 are
going to other private or parochial schools. Three
will be attending Friends Academy; one will be at­tending
Westbury Friends; seven to Eastern Military
Academy; 32 are going to Chaminade; nine will
attend Archbishop Molloy; 13 will attend Long
Island Lutheran High School; and a small number
will attend Trinity Lutheran, Our Redeemer Luth­eran,
Grace Church School; and a number will be
transported to Special Service schools such as Mill
Neck Manor School for the Deaf; AHRC in Westbury;
The Cerebral Palsy school in Roosevelt; and the
Catholic Charities school for the Deaf and Blind at
St. James R. C. school for the retarded children,
emotionally disturbed and brain injured at Duffy
Avenue, Hicksville.
Where the front license plate used to oo is a new replacement, Fehrenbach
GOP gimmick to be appearing Boon all over Oyster Bay urging the election
of Assemblyman Edwin J- Fehrenbach as Town Supervisor. Fehrenbach
served in the Assembly for eight years.
One of four language laboratories which will assist
in the teaching of French, Spanish, German and
Russian in School District 22. Students listen to
recorded conversations in the language that they
are studying and then record their own conversation
for comparison purposes. The school district has
had language labs for eight years in one school and
for five years in two others.